Writing in public does not have to mean pretending every thought is finished.
The more useful habit is catching ideas while they still have fingerprints on them: what was confusing, what changed, what failed, and what made the next attempt easier. Those details disappear quickly when everything is polished into a tidy conclusion.
A Better Shape For Small Thoughts
A working note can be narrow. It can answer one question, document one implementation choice, or preserve one useful reference. The important thing is that it lowers the cost of returning to the idea later.
That is the kind of writing this blog should encourage: small pieces with enough context to be useful, and enough looseness to keep moving.
The Web As Memory
Personal websites are good at holding this kind of material because they do not need to fit the shape of a feed. A note can be updated, linked, moved, and rediscovered without asking permission from a platform timeline.
That makes the blog less like a broadcast channel and more like a durable workbench.